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Blast from the past
Blast from the past





blast from the past
  1. #Blast from the past movie
  2. #Blast from the past full
blast from the past

While he runs from the psychiatrist’s assistant, Eve has a change of heart about him and realizes that maybe he really just wants to go home. When he returns to her home the next day after finding his home again, he finds a County Family Services Department psychiatrist and her assistant that Eve called waiting for him. Freaked out by this, she politely asks him to leave, and he does. Eventually, as with nuclear fallout, we find ourselves waiting patiently for things to die down before we can emerge into the daylight.Adam (Brendan Fraser) falls for Eve (Alicia Silverstone) (and vice-versa), and he eventually asks her to come back with him to the fallout shelter to live with his parents Calvin (Christopher Walken) and Helen (Sissy Spacek), since she looked like a totally healthy “non-mutant” that he could marry. And director Hugh Wilson (co-writer with Bill Kelly), who directed the moribund "The First Wives Club," has no comic metronome in his head. Watching Eve fall slowly in love, with only occasional laughs to make it sing, is a tough task.

#Blast from the past movie

The relationship between Adam and Eve –apparently the crowd draw of the movie – is no testament to greatness. Given what they see of modern Los Angeles, there's little evidence to contradict their observations. It's also funny to watch the Webbers deal with a world that they assume is peopled with post-nuclear mutants. He immediately starts a religious cult dedicated to worshiping them. When the Webbers literally break the surface in their homemade elevator, for instance, the bleary owner of the bar that occupies their former home site, believes Adam and his parents are some sort of celestial trinity. This second section, despite all kinds of story business with Eve and her gay friend Troy (Dave Foley), has its moments, but not nearly enough of them. He meets Eve (Alicia Silverstone), a jaded woman who has seen everything except a wet-behind-the-ears naif with amazing intelligence, who likes seersuckers, has an incredibly valuable baseball card collection and is looking for an eligible "non-mutant" from Pasadena to repopulate the world. In this "fish-out-of-water" situation, Brendan Fraser (the grown Adam) essentially plays a 1962 version of the caveman he played in "Encino Man." Determined to stand by her man, despite her screaming need to return topside, she takes woozy refuge in Martinis.īut when the time-triggered locks finally open, we're shoved abruptly into a mediocre comic romance. And as Helen, Spacek produces some delightfully gonzo turns.

#Blast from the past full

Strangelove," with talk of the commies stealing precious bodily fluids, but he's full of goofy 1960s spirit. Under Calvin's relentless tutelage, the son learns the arts and sciences, grows up on "The Honeymooners" and Perry Como, but has real problems when his dad tries to explain baseball. While "Blast" stays underground, it's an enjoyable satire about preserving the white picket fence soul of America. With his doting wife (Sissy Spacek) beside him, and provisions to last until the end of nuclear winter, he closes his steel bunker door – and its 30-year time locks – on the world. But family head Calvin Webber (Christopher Walken), a brilliant, paranoid scientist, assumes the commies have dropped the big one. "Blast From the Past" saves its best for first.Ĭaught in the hysteria of the Cuban Missile Crisis in the early 1960s, a California family are testing their backyard fallout shelter when they hear an explosion.Īctually, it's a plane that crashed into their house. Alicia Silverstone falls for Brendan Fraser in "Blast From the Past." (New Line)Ĭhildren under 13 should be accompanied by a parent







Blast from the past